Too late for N.Y. prosecution in securities meltdown

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ALBANY, N.Y. — While New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman alleges massive fraud in mortgage-backed securities in a lawsuit filed this week, he is not criminally prosecuting anyone.

Described as a template for more lawsuits to follow, the move signals that Wall Street players will not face state prison for packaging and selling the troubled investments that nearly brought the US economy to its knees. The felony statute of limitations under New York’s Martin Act against securities fraud is five years, so it is too late to bring a criminal case.

The civil suit asserts misconduct by Bear Stearns & Co. in 2006 and 2007 cost investors $22.5 billion in losses and left them holding an additional $30 billion in bad loans. The suit filed Monday names Bear Stearns successor JPMorgan Chase, which says it will contest the allegations.

‘‘The statute of limitations is an issue we expect to be in dispute in the litigation,’’ Schneiderman said in describing the civil suit, noting that even then, it is six years under the Martin Act. That also puts pressure on his office to bring cases soon against other investment banks for actions that led to the 2008 market crash.

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His office has a so-called ‘‘tolling agreement’’ with the defendants in this case, waiving their right to dismiss otherwise time-barred matters, Schneiderman said. At issue is conduct back to 2005, he said.

The complaint alleges that Bear Stearns failed to properly evaluate pools of mortgages, ignoring their defects and misleading investors by saying they maintained due diligence and quality controls — in order to satisfy big lenders and meet demand in financial markets that eventually imploded.

‘‘All of these representations were false and misleading,’’ Schneiderman said. ‘‘We also contend that their conduct as alleged in the complaint was essentially a scheme to fraudulently conceal from the investors the gross defects of dysfunctionality in their due diligence and quality control systems.’’

The lawsuit, seeking damages to recoup the losses, was the first filed under the auspices of the working group established by President Obama to investigate and prosecute alleged misconduct that contributed to the financial crisis. Schneiderman is cochairman of the group.

JPMorgan said the complaint ‘‘is entirely about historic conduct’’ by Bear Stearns, which it acquired in 2008 at the behest of the federal government, and that the executives of the former company criticized in the complaint are gone now. Schneiderman’s complaint relied on ‘‘recycled claims’’ made by private plaintiffs and none of those lawsuits have been settled, the company said.

‘‘We intend to contest these allegations,’’ JPMorgan spokeswoman Jennifer Zuccarelli said. The company is cooperating with members of Obama’s working group and couldn’t confirm any numbers about losses in Schneiderman’s complaint, she said. ‘‘We plan to live up to obligations under deal documents,’’ she said.

Governor Andrew Cuomo of New York, state attorney general from 2007 to 2010, also didn’t prosecute Bear Stearns. Spokesman Richard Bamberger said at the time the office was looking into it, federal prosecutors asked the attorney general to cooperate with their ongoing criminal investigation. ‘‘The attorney general’s office respected that request,’’ he said.

In 2009, US Attorney Benton Campbell in Brooklyn prosecuted two Bear Stearns executives, accusing them of fraud and conspiracy for allegedly lying to investors about the subprime mortgage market. Both were acquitted.

Campbell, now a partner at a Manhattan firm, did not immediately reply to requests for comment.

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